Supersnitch
Scandal: Mistakes Were Made, Says DEA Chief
Hutchinson - But No One Made Them
DRCNet has
reported on several occasions on the strange
odyssey of Andrew Chambers, the St. Louis native
who went from being the Drug Enforcement
Administration's star informant to one its
biggest embarrassments.
Over a 16-year
career, Chambers received more than $2 million in
DEA funds - his reward for helping to arrest more
than 400 people in 31 different cities.
He also committed
perjury on the witness stand dozens of times,
lying about his arrest and conviction record, his
tax payments and his level of educational
achievement. According to a DEA internal
investigation obtained by the St. Louis Post,
some DEA agents and supervisors knew of Chambers'
mendacious ways, but failed to reign him in: http://www.drcnet.org/wol/185.html#deasnitch
Now, DEA
administrator Asa Hutchinson has announced that
no DEA employees will be disciplined for letting
Chambers get away with serial perjury. In an
interview last Friday, he told the St. Louis Post
that no agents would
be punished because it was "a failure of
policy versus a failure of personnel."
Hutchinson also pleaded that the 9,000-strong
agency had been duped by the crafty Chambers.
"Chambers abused his position with us, and
we didn't have the systems in place to keep the
checks and balances on that," he excused.
According to the
agency's own records, however, it did have the
ability to have high-level headquarters officials
wage a two-year court battle to keep Chambers'
criminal record and his repeated lying about it
on the stand secret. Hutchinson told the Post
that the agency had made reforms in the wake of
the Supersnitch scandal: The agency has now set
up a central registry to track snitches who
testify in more than one place, said Hutchinson,
and all agents have been ordered to turn over
complete records on their informants to both
prosecutors and defense attorneys. Hutchinson
also defended the use of informants, saying they
were "crucial" not only to the war on
drugs, but now to the war on terrorism.
"You've got to use informants, otherwise you
can't get the job done," he said.
A DEA press
spokesman in Washington confirmed Hutchinson's
announcement to the Post. "A thorough
investigation has been completed, and there are
no findings that require disciplinary
action," he told DRCNet. Dean Steward is not
satisfied with the results. He is the Los Angeles
public defender who broke the scandal by pursuing
a three-year battle with the DEA and the Justice
Department. "I'm stunned that so much
government wrongdoing meant so little to the
government," he told the Post. "Had
this been a major corporation, heads would
roll," he added.
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